James Forrestal
and Palestine
As we relate in the newly published book, The Assassination
of James Forrestal, the starting place for our examination of the fatal
fall of the recently resigned first American Secretary of Defense, Forrestal,
was the latter pages of the widely acclaimed 1992 biography, Driven Patriot:
The Life and Times of James Forrestal by Townsend Hoopes and Douglas
Brinkley. We quickly discovered that
their account of Forrestal’s death is replete with very obvious shortcomings,
which for some strange reason no one else seemed to have picked up on.
Apart from what appears to be Soviet-like
obligatory adherence to the completely unsupportable notion that Forrestal took
his own life, the biography is largely deserving of the accolades that it
received at the time. Most importantly,
it went a long way toward restoring the reputation that had taken a real
beating in the period starting a year or so before Forrestal’s death and
continuing right up to the time of the Hoopes and Brinkley biography. The authors leave little doubt as to who and
what were behind the attempted destruction of Forrestal’s reputation.
The sixth and concluding section of their
book is entitled “Exhaustion and Tragedy.”
The first chapter in the six-chapter section is appropriately titled,
“The Palestine Imbroglio.” The last
section of the chapter bears the title, “The Cost to Forrestal,” and it begins
with this paragraph:
Forrestal, [Secretary of State, George C.]
Marshall, [Under Secretary of State Robert A.] Lovett, the State Department,
and the Joint Chiefs of Staff were all agreed that a war in the Middle East
into which American troops might be drawn, loss of Arab friendship, and
long-range turbulence in the whole region were too high a price to pay for a
Jewish state. They underestimated,
however, the elemental force of the Zionist movement and the need of a
politically weak administration for the support of Jewish votes. Ironically, although he was not, in fact, a
central figure in developing and carrying out U.S. policy on Palestine,
Forrestal took a disproportionate share of the heat and suffered heavier damage
to his reputation from hostile press attacks than any of the others. In part, this seemed the consequence of his
outspoken insistence on reasoned argument and orderly process, an inability to
conceal his dismay at the sorry, fantastically disordered performance of
government officials and special interest lobbyists and their feckless
indifference to the consequences of their actions. It was a spectacle entailing everything
Forrestal considered inimical to good government.
The discriminating reader will notice only
one sour note in that paragraph. It was
not Jewish votes that were so important, but Jewish money and media
power that wield a far more powerful influence over the total votes rendered
than their actual numbers represent at the polling place. They have also perhaps inadvertently put
their finger upon a very important factor in that power wielding. The balance of power between the incumbent Democrats
and the Republicans was very precarious.
Such a situation made their money and power in tipping the balance much
more effective, and such has really been the case ever since. A strong, effective American president and
American political party that can do without Zionist money and power is to be
feared, so it is very much in their interests that America have weak leadership
and a sharply divided electorate.
In their next paragraph the authors
explain that, actually, in the short run, the two great concerns of Forrestal and
the others proved to be unwarranted. The
Arabs were not in a position to cut the West off from their supplies of oil,
because, in so doing, they would have ruined their own economies. They depended upon the revenue of the oil
exports. And the Zionists proved to be
much stronger militarily than expected and were able to fend off their Arab
neighbors—who proved to be weaker than expected—without the need for American
troops to assist them.
At this point Hoopes and Brinkley fail to
observe that this unexpected military strength of the fledgling Israeli state
was a significantly mixed blessing. It
hardly proved to be a barrier to the United States being dragged into bigger
military and diplomatic commitments in the region. It gave the Israelis the confidence to
instigate the Six-Day War in 1967 to grab the rest of Palestine, and the most
sensible analysis of the USS Liberty incident is that it was a
false flag attack intended to bring the United States into the war in a big way
on the side of the Israelis. It does not
take much imagination to see 9/11 as the USS
Liberty attack that succeeded.
Hoopes and Brinkley, like Forrestal and
his cohorts in the U.S. foreign policy establishment in 1948, are prescient as
we pick up their narrative to the end of the chapter:
In the longer perspective, it is hard to
fault those who in 1948 argued that sponsoring a state of Israel was not in the
U.S. national interest. The United
States has paid, and continues to pay, an extremely high political and economic
price for its indulgent support of that nation.
Instability in the Middle East over the past forty years would have
existed had there been no Israel, but the unending Arab-Israeli antagonism has
inexorably bifurcated the U.S. approach to the Middle East, making it impossible
for Washington to define and pursue U.S. interests there without ambivalence
and contradiction, or to promote the economic development of the region as a
whole. A series of bloody Arab-Israeli
wars has not perceptibly mitigated the hostility or the vicious complications,
and these conditions continue to fuel a relentless arms buildup on both sides
(including nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons) that makes the Middle
East the most overarmed and explosive region in the
world. “The melancholy outcome,” Robert
Lovett said in 1985, “is in the day’s headline.” His statement applies with equal force in
1991, even after the U.S.-led Persian Gulf War against Iraq. The Palestinians remain a permanently
dispossessed people.
Forrestal, Lovett added, “warned that
unless the American support of the Zionist demands guaranteed that the rights
of the Palestinians would be justly upheld and the boundaries of the new state
explicitly drawn, the United States would alienate not alone the Arabs of the
Middle East, but the whole Moslem world…and eventual harvest would be not a
peaceful homeland for a race exhausted by persecution and massacre, but a
reaping of a whirlwind of hate for all of us.”
The immediate consequence for Forrestal,
however, was to become (continuing to quote an unpublished work by Lovett) the
target of “an outpouring of slander and calumny that must surely be judged one
of the most shameful intervals in American journalism.” (pp. 402-404)
One can well surmise that the authors
suspected who was as much behind Forrestal’s untimely death as they were the
destruction of his reputation, but they had their own reputations and careers,
if not their very lives, to think of.
David Martin
August 6, 2019
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